Terrorists from the US going to fight Somalia government
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On May 25, 2009 At 9:34 am
Category : US, World
Tags : Africa, al qaeda, somalia
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Abu-Muslim, aka: American al-qaeda, a US citizen fighting in Somalia, seen here in video clip
Somalia’s president has condemned the presence of foreign fighters in his country as he called for help to tackle armed opposition groups seeking to topple his government.
“Somalia is being invaded by foreign fighters, whose main purpose is to turn the country into an Afghanistan or an Iraq,” Sharif Ahmed said on Monday.
The appeal came a day after after the al-Shabab group claimed responsibility for a deadly suicide attack in the Somali capital on Sunday.
Authorities suspect the bomber, a teenage boy, was one of hundreds foreigners, from countries including Pakistan, Yemen and the United States, that the UN believes have joined Somali groups.
“We urge Somalis to defend against those groups that include foreigners, and we ask the international community to back us,” Ahmed said at a news conference at his Villa Somalia residence.
Overthrow
Al-Shabab, in alliance with the Hizbul Islam group, has vowed to overthrow Ahmed, accusing him of being a traitor after he signed a peace deal with the interim government last year.
Ahmed was previously a leader of the Islamic Courts Union, which effectively controlled much of southern and central Somalia in late 2006, and counted al-Shabab and other groups fighting the government as its allies.
The United States says that al-Shabab is linked to al-Qaeda, while Hizbul Islam is led by Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, another former Islamic courts leader, that Washington says has connections to al-Qaeda.
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Security officials say that the groups have become more sophisticated in recent months, planting improved roadside devices and carrying out suicide attacks.
Al-Shabab has warned that there will be more suicide attacks against government forces in the coming days after a surge in violence this month killed almost 200 people in the capital, Mogadishu.
“I can tell you that 80 per cent of the people killed and injured are civilians who were caught in the crossfire,” Mohamoud Ibrahim Garweyne, Somalia’s humanitarian affairs minister, said on Monday.
“The clashes have also displaced 8,367 families, who have reached temporary camps outside the capital where their livelihoods are very precarious.”
The UN says that about 60,000 residents fled their homes in the capital in recent days, joining more than one million people who had already been displaced by the fighting.
“It’s almost impossible for us, or even our Somalis partner organisations, to reach these people, who are likely to go without food and shelter for a long time,” Roberta Russo, a spokeswoman for the UN refugee agency, said in Nairobi.




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